Alan Halfhill
September 27th, 2011, 11:18 PM
I like the camera so much I bought another one. I have been wanting a second camera for a while. Back in the film daze I always had at least two cameras (2 different types of film), sometimes the same bodies. Well now I have it again.
For me the 60D has been the best camera for what I do. Video and stills. It is the best camera for video Canon makes because of the manual controls and the swivel LCD. It is also a pretty good still camera as well. It is a nice compromise of both. So a second one was bought at Neal Photo in Philipsburg Montana.
Just used both cameras for a video shoot. One tight and one wide.
James Donnelly
September 28th, 2011, 02:39 AM
I like the camera so much I bought another one. I have been wanting a second camera for a while. Back in the film daze I always had at least two cameras (2 different types of film), sometimes the same bodies. Well now I have it again.
For me the 60D has been the best camera for what I do. Video and stills. It is the best camera for video Canon makes because of the manual controls and the swivel LCD. It is also a pretty good still camera as well. It is a nice compromise of both. So a second one was bought at Neal Photo in Philipsburg Montana.
Just used both cameras for a video shoot. One tight and one wide.
I am curious what avantages you see for video in the 60d over the 600d. Just about to get myself a second camera too.
John Wiley
September 28th, 2011, 09:23 PM
Another of the advantages of the DSLR: how cheap it is to own multiple cameras. It might cost $5000 to buy your first body and a collection of lenses, but after that the 2nd camera setup is only $1000!
I never would've dreamed of having 3-4 matching cameras when I was shooting on Sony V1P's and Z1P's - that would've cost upwards of $20,000! But with DSLR's, you can just keep adding bodies, and (assuming you don't need to get a duplicate lens) you'll already have everything else you need. Same thing goes for when it's time to upgrade. You only pay $1000-2000 for a new body instead of $6000 for a whole new camcorder.
Pat Flores
September 29th, 2011, 07:43 PM
I like the camera so much I bought another one. I have been wanting a second camera for a while. Back in the film daze I always had at least two cameras (2 different types of film), sometimes the same bodies. Well now I have it again.
For me the 60D has been the best camera for what I do. Video and stills. It is the best camera for video Canon makes because of the manual controls and the swivel LCD. It is also a pretty good still camera as well. It is a nice compromise of both. So a second one was bought at Neal Photo in Philipsburg Montana.
Just used both cameras for a video shoot. One tight and one wide.
if you are ok with keeping the crop body then why not but personally if I go for a second set up I would look into full frame..(5Dm2)...of course assuming business is good enough for that kind of purchase...
Peter Phelan
September 30th, 2011, 04:34 PM
I have both 5D2 and 60D. Both have their good points, but I must admit to choosing the 60D if I am doing just simple one camera video. I have VF's for both cameras, but when shooting myself as the "talent", it is very conveneient to flip the screen around to be facing me for composition etc and then activate the video recording using the Canon infra red control.
Working alone on a two camera shoot needing wide angle coverage, I usually have the 5D2 with 17-40mm fixed (but occasionally adjusted for viewpoint - zoom etc) and "run around" getting close ups and general material using the 60D.
Peter
Pat Flores
October 1st, 2011, 10:03 PM
yeah sometimes that 1.6x is such a pain if you dont have a wide lens...sometimes not even 18(1.6) is wide enough...like in cars...